You Are Not Too Late
132 pages
English

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132 pages
English

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Description

A new collection of renowned artist Nikki McClure's stunning papercuts, with a contemporary, community-minded messageGather, Navigate, Welcome, Fortify, Surrender, Save, Listen, Make Mistakes. These are some of the messages renowned artist Nikki McClure affirms in this gorgeous monograph of her papercuts. Organized by season, McClure's work reminds us of the important things such as the change of seasons, slowing down the world for a moment so we can actually experience it, and looking up at the stars to dream. In a follow-up to her gorgeous monograph Collect Raindrops, You Are Not Too Late is a new collection of McClure's original papercuts that have appeared in her beloved yearly calendars. All cut from a single piece of black paper with an X-Acto knife, McClure's artwork features compelling images of everyday life, often accompanied by a powerful verb that inspires the viewer to action. McClure shares more than images, though, in this new book, interweaving her memories and making of the future, offering insight into her creative life.

Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 19 avril 2022
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781647007317
Langue English
Poids de l'ouvrage 23 Mo

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,1166€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

by Nikki McClure

ABRAMS

NEW YORK
Editor: Meredith Clark

Designer: Jenice Kim

Managing Editor: Mary O Mara

Production Manager: Larry Pekarek

Library of Congress Control Number: 2021946835

ISBN: 978-1-4197-5838-6

eISBN: 978-1-64700-731-7

Copyright 2022 Nikki McClure

Cover copyright 2022 Abrams

Published in 2022 by Abrams, an imprint of ABRAMS.

All rights reserved. No portion of this book may be reproduced, stored

in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means,

mechanical, electronic, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without

written permission from the publisher.

Abrams books are available at special discounts when purchased in

quantity for premiums and promotions as well as fundraising or

educational use. Special editions can also be created to specification.

For details, contact specialsales@abramsbooks.com or the address below.

Abrams

is a registered trademark of Harry N. Abrams, Inc.

ABRAMS The Art of Books 195 Broadway, New York, NY 10007 abramsbooks.com
For Finn
I make time. Since 1998 I have made a calendar every year to accom-

pany us as we spin around the sun. You Are Not Too Late is a collection

of my calendar artwork from 2015 through 2021. The artwork from

1998 to 2014 is gathered in my previous book, Collect Raindrops .

Each week I sit down to a black square of paper and cut out the future.

The images I create hold many stories from the past, the present, and

the future. There are stories of lived memories, as most of my images

are inspired by events in my life. There are also stories of the work of

making and the meditation of that time-cutting and cutting and then

a word pops into my head, and I add it to the sketch, the list growing,

and then back to cutting and cutting, the present weaving with the

past. There are stories of when the image appeared on walls through-

out the world as the art for that month and year. In that collective

moment, magic resonance happened, and the art synchronized with

the present. People had conversations and wonderings. The art and

word for that time became a mantra, an exhortation, a reminder.

New stories were made. And then there are the stories of the future-

the moment when this book will be opened to a random page and the

image will enter into a life that is always changing. These are only a

few of the stories that I have to share. There will be more. The spin-

ning will continue. I will keep making time.
In 2015, my son, Finn, was eight, then nine. I moved here, to a beach

tucked away from the storm winds and next to the sea. Here was dif-

ferent than the perch I had occupied on a hill of glacially ground sand

paved over with a grid of light-ribboned streets. The way I lived my

life shifted in this new place. My work changed, and my stories and

sense of time deepened. Here, there are deep piles of clam and oyster

shells, middens made by the first inhabitants of this shore. The white

shells were covered by sawdust from the oldest trees cut with the first

sawmills. The beach-buried layers of dust and shell open up again

with winter storm waves and rain gullies. Here is a cedar with stout

limbs bent upward like a semaphoring octopus and with a magic circle

at her base. Here is tides. Here is the time of moon at night and time

of owls calling.

Time is measured differently here. Time is marked not only by lines

penciled on the doorway marching ever higher, or calendar days

filled with appointments, but also by soil creation and composition.

Clay yields to vole, hole by hole, leaf pile by leaf pile gathered from

autumn raking. Slowly. Thousands of years of leaves will make enough

soil for a carrot to grow comfortable. Cedars are better suited for this

time work. I am too idle; I have worked too much. I need more black-

berry time-with too many to fit into my hand and with no bucket

other than my belly. I try to stretch out summer by leaving the sticky

purple stain on my fingers well into winter. I can smell that warm

sweetness now as the buds begin to re-leaf this world. My fingernails

are dark, my tongue blue, my arms are scratched and they sting when

I swim. I taste the smoke of that night. Here is life in the open and in

whispered shade. Waken this part of you. You are not too late.

The first leaves of nettles appear as unexpected

friends that you meet on a walk and whom you

want to take home for dinner, but you ve got no

gloves. Old maple leaves do until they don t. By

morning, the feeling is gone, and you will forget

your gloves again.

The first nettle hunt always starts before there

are nettles. I wander off into the forest in the

winter. The ground cover is low and easy to move

through. There are no wasp nests to step on.

Deer paths are more nuanced than efficient.

I have read that fifteen minutes of walking in a

forest strengthens one s memory and remember

that much before pausing on the verb: strengthens .

Encourages? Dares? The tangled path. The compli-

cated journey full of challenges and obstacles dares

me to remember. Next time I ll bring gloves.

DARE

JANUARY 2015
THRILL

The tangle of summer is on hold. Light breaks low and to the south. It

cuts through the warm earth breath of the forest. A song sparrow sings

not for me but for this day beginning. There is a thrill in being part of

something not meant for me-this dawn in this forest with this song.

JANUARY 2016
BECOME

How many kids can you fit in a

small sailboat? How many should

you? How do you become a pirate

if you never try?

JANUARY 2017
RECTIFY

The birds have parties on sunny winter days. Lives that are lived too

quickly for reflection are tricked by the bright light shining off the

windows. Every year there is a bird to bury. We stop our work and

tend to the task. We find a tree and dig a hole at its base. We line

the hole with ferns, and we speak kind words. There is a moment of

silence. And then life resumes with the possibility that the tree will

bear fruit and that feathers will shift in the wind again.

JANUARY 2018
TRANSFORM

When pussy willows become tiger

tails, women march with power.

JANUARY 2019

INSTILL

Winter brings books. Piles of books grow on every

horizontal surface, and the couch is never long

enough. How do kids learn? When does learning

take place? Does it happen when heart beats are

synchronized? Over stories heard in beats and

breaths? Jay T. read a book on Swedish design

while Finn listened. The couch was pink satin.

I got it when I turned thirty. I was ready for a

couch then. It was in my studio for a while until

I was able to buy a house. It was a magnet for

long conversations and naps and learning.

JANUARY 2020
What did I consider as I contemplated this image?

I knew we would inaugurate a president and

would have an election disputed forcibly if the

results were not transparent and overwhelmingly

obvious. I knew that the world would be deep into

its second winter of the COVID-19 pandemic and

that there would be deep grief and loss as well as

immediate suffering as people struggled to be safe

and housed and fed and emotionally cared for.

I knew that the way through this would require

being optimistic and realistic, and it would take

bravery to be both. And I knew that it would rain.

What I did not know was that my mother would

die on January 4th from COVID-19.

I was scared to make this picture. I felt like I was

touching pain and tragedy too closely. It was a

vision that I could feel the strength of and that

I had to be brave and confront, knowing I had

opened myself to the consequences of its creation.

But I knew I would have the courage to face it all

with eyes wide open.

JANUARY 2021

LOVE

It was February and raining. I was being inter-

viewed. I needed a break and fresh air. The tide

was low so we went walking; the interviewer kept

her tape running, microphone held out to me.

The rain was streaming down, cutting through

the pebbled beach, deep enough to uncover the

tire. We would only see the tire once a year during

a heavy rain and low tide. When the water rose

again, the tire would be covered up until next

year. So we went for it, with the microphone on

and the stream of water rushing. Using a pole to

lever and bark to shovel the infilling pebbles, we

got that tire out from its grave. It is on record,

this act of love.

FEBRUARY 2015
TRANSVERSE

February is the time when I can rouse the cozi-

est for a night walk. Let s go on an owl hunt.

People who never walk in the forest by day can be

convinced by mysteries remembered in cells and

molecules, even if they have never openly con-

templated it. We use lights at first, and then one

by one they turn off. Light is no longer needed.

The sky is not as dark as it once was. Clouds glow

from cities and illuminate the woods far away.

In the not so dark, everything changes. Objects

grow larger. Wet branches curve to the moon.

We hunt and always find something. Sometimes

it is an owl.

FEBRUARY 2016

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